Wild-caught green-winged
macaw (left), found in tropical forests and Mangrove swamps in Central and South
America, are exported from Guyana and Suriname for the international pet trade.
The largest parrot in the world, the Hyacinth macaw (right), provides Brazilians
hope for an alternate use of wild parrots-ecotourism. A meager 5,000 Hyacinth
macaw are thought to remain in their natural habitat. J. Gilardi (r.) Mark
L. Stafford/Parrots International (l.)

Exotic birds are beautiful animals, kept by
millions of people as captive companions. Sadly, the global trade in wild birds
has a drastically negative impact on their ability to survive in their natural
habitats. Mortality of wild-caught parrots prior to export has been documented
to range from 45-70%, as a result of poor nutrition, stress, and overcrowding.

The complex international web of bird smuggling
and illicit trade reveals the breadth of the problem today: Indonesians smuggle
parrots into Singapore, Italians smuggle exotics out of Yugoslavia, and
countless species of wild-caught birds are kidnapped in Central and South
America and illegally imported into the European Union. Last year, British
citizen Raymond Humphrey, for example, was sentenced to more than six years in
prison for smuggling internationally-protected birds into England. Do we
literally love wild birds to death in our quest to keep parrots and other exotic
birds as pets? Current threats to bird species in the wild vary. They are at
risk from habitat loss, invasive species, pollution, and overexploitation from
hunting for food and live capture for the pet trade. Regardless of which threat
poses the greatest risk to the birds' long-term viability, one thing is
clear-wild birds are disappearing fast. A new paper by the Worldwatch Institute,
Winged Messengers: The Decline of Birds, presents some startling statistics. In
general, "almost 1,200 species-about 12 percent of the world's 9,800 bird
species-may face extinction within the next century.... Human-related factors
threaten 99 percent of the most imperiled bird species." Specifically, with
respect to the trade in parrots as pets, "almost a third of the world's 330
parrot species are threatened with extinction due to pressures from collecting
for the pet trade, combined with habitat loss." The World Parrot Trust (WPT)
agrees that there is an on-going and dramatic decline of wild parrots worldwide
and notes that the parrot family has more globally threatened species than any
other family of birds. The World Conservation Union's "Red List" contains 94
species of parrots that are currently considered vulnerable, endangered, or
critically endangered, and many more sub-species are equally at risk of
disappearing forever. Recent scientific findings from studies throughout the
Neotropics demonstrate that the demand for large expensive parrots as pets is a
key driving force for this trade. In June 2001, Timothy Wright of the University
of Maryland published an important study in the respected journal Conservation
Biology entitled "Nest Poaching in Neotropical Parrots."

Wright and his team concluded, "Poaching of
parrots from the wild is an economic activity driven by a combination of the
market demand for parrots as pets, the large profits to the pet industry, and
the rural poverty in many countries with wild-parrot populations." As a result,
nest poaching of wild birds in unprotected areas is rife. Deaths from poaching
of nests, they found, was "significantly greater than mortality due to natural
causes." Further, "nest poaching for the pet trade is a major conservation
threat for many parrot species." The underlying importance of the study was its
attempt to assess whether greater protection for birds in the wild exists after
trade bans on their international commerce are put in place. The international
trade in threatened and endangered species is governed by the United Nations
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(CITES). But sometimes stricter national measures are vital to add an extra
layer of protection for wildlife at risk. For instance, a number of countries,
among them, Australia, Ecuador, and Guyana, have imposed export bans to prevent
their native bird species from being exported commercially.

Lilac-crowned and
yellow-headed amazon parrots smuggled into the United States from Mexico.
U.S. Customs

The United States took the equally important
step in 1992 of banning the importation of some of the most critical bird
species. As a major importer of wild birds, the U.S. action was remarkably
significant and successful. The Wild Bird Conservation Act (WBCA) converted the
U.S. from the largest importer of wild-caught birds to a virtual non-importer of
wild-caught parrots. The Wright study importantly concludes: "Poaching rates
were significantly lower in the years after enactment of the WBCA....
[suggesting] that importation bans reduce poaching in exporting countries by
limiting the demand by consumers in developed countries." Legal and illegal
imports have been reduced to a trickle, though it surely still exists, and
captive bred parrots are now more available and less expensive than ever for pet
owners, breeders, and collectors. Restricting or eliminating the legal trade
will reduce the illegal trade, rather than drive it underground as is often
suggested. But not all countries have gotten the message. Between 1997 and 2000,
the European Union officially imported 469,602 wild-caught birds of 111 species.
Wild-caught birds are generally unsuitable as pets when they arrive in European
homes, and thousands of these birds end up unwanted and ill-cared for. By
importing wild-caught parrots, developed European nations are, in fact,
unconscionably exploiting the resources of developing nations by creating a
harvest that is neither biologically nor economically sustainable.

Therefore, WPT is spearheading a campaign to
immediately cease the importation of wild-caught birds into the European Union,
following America's wise lead from a decade before. According to Dr. James
Gilardi of the WPT, "The existing trade is cruel and inhumane to tens of
thousands of highly intelligent and social parrots. Figures on the unacceptably
high mortality that occurs during the trapping, shipping, and quarantine of
these birds demonstrate that the trade impacts far more wild birds than the
numbers which end up for sale in Europe and Asia."

The spectacle of wild parrots is now an
enormously popular ecotourism attraction and generates millions of dollars
annually for tropical nations. Tourism creates solid employment for indigenous
people as guides and lodge operators, and, if implemented well, ecotourism
facilitates the long term protection of natural areas. The international
attention that comes along with the tourism also builds local pride in natural
heritage, which further facilitates nature conservation. In contrast, harvesting
parrots for the pet trade provides small numbers of temporary jobs, and the
financial benefits fall primarily in the hands of unscrupulous dealers in large
cities rather than indigenous people.

YOU CAN MAKE
A DIFFERENCE

Send the European Union the message that you, like thousands of other people
around the world, feel that it's time to stop the cruel practice of capturing
birds from the wild for international commerce. The wild bird trade is an
unacceptable exploitation of the natural resources of developing countries. The
E.U. has become the largest importer of wild-caught birds; the existing
legislation in Europe is ineffective at stopping the inhumane and unsustainable
harvesting of these wild birds. Visit the World Parrot Trust web site to find
out more information and sign the online petition. Visit
www.worldparrottrust.org/trade/tradeindex.htm.

Also, if you want a bird as a pet, do not buy one
who is wild-caught. Always check for a leg band and ask for documentation
showing the bird is captive bred. Any reputable dealer should be able to provide
that-particularly for an expensive bird.